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29 Nov 2010, 04:03

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This is for GMAT bees who have just started their preperation. This is taken from various books. Vedic Mathematics and Study materials from TIME, a premier institution that provide training for Indian Institute of Management CAT exam.Shall be adding new techniques in speed mathematics as i go through various topics. So plz do keep up with this thread. If any of u has got more techniques plz do share it here.

To master the quants section, u need to have Knowledge in every area, speed in solving a question and approach in tackeling the test papers. Speed is very important in GMAT because you are supposed to attend all the questions in GMAT and unattempted wuestions will lead to high penalty in the total score. I would like to demonstrate certain speed methodes of calculation which will be of great use to you in GMAT. These techniques are drawn from different sources. i just thought of consolidating the useful techniques here.

Before getting into methodes of speed calculations, there are few aspects to be kept in mind. For getting the most out of speed calculation, u should be thorough in the following

Multiplication tables - (1*15) up to (20*15)Squares up to 25 any higher square can be calculated easily. Cubes upto 12Powers of 2 - up to 12Powers of 3 - upto 6Reciprocals of numbers - upto 12Compliments of 100 (i.e. the differance between 100 and the given two-digit number. eg- 25's compliment is 100-25 = 75)

Some ways of simplifying calculations

Multiplication by 5For multiplication by 5, you should multiply the number to be multiplied by 10 and then divide it by 2.eg: 6493 * 5 = 64930/2 = 32465

Multiplication by 25Multiply the number to be multiplied by 100 and divide it by 4eg: 6493 * 25 = 649300/4 = 162325

Multiplication by 125Multiply the number by 1000 and divide by 8eg: 6493 * 125 = 6493000/8 = 811625( Alternatively, you can treat 125 as 100+25. So multiplication by 125 can be treated as multiplication by 100 and add to this number - 1/4th of itself because 25 is 1/4th of 100.)

Multiplication by 11the rule is "for each digit add the right hand side and write the result as the corresponding figure in the product."For the purpose of applying the rule, it will be easier if you assume that there is one "zero" on either side of the given number.eg: 7469*11= 074690 (apply the above said rule) = 82159

Calculation of SquaresGetting the square of a number ending in 5 is simple. If the last digit of the number is 5, the last two digits of the square will be 25. Whatever is the earlier part of the number multiply it with one more than itself and that will be the first part of the answer. ( the second part of the answer will be 25 only)

35\(^2\)=1225.Here 3*4 = 12(first part) and the second part of the answer is always 25 so the answer is 1225

45\(^2\) = 2025 First part of th answer is 4 * 5=25 followed by 5*5=25

Multiplying two numbers both of which are close to the same power of 10

Suppose we want to multiply 97 with 92. The power of 10 to which these two numbers are close is 100. Here 100 is called as the " base ". Write the two numbers with the differance from the base i.e., 100 (including the sign)as shown below.

97 --> -3 ( 97 is 100-3 )92 --> -8 ( 92 is 100-8 )

Then take the sum of the two numbers ( including their signs) along EITHER one of the two diagonals ( it will be same the same in both cases ). Here diagonal sum is 97-8=92-3=89. This will form the first part of the answer.

The second part of the answer is the product ( along with the sign) of the difference from the power of 10 written for the two numbers, Here it is the profuct of -3 and -8 which is 24.

Now the last step is putting these two parts 89 and 24 together one next to the other. Here the answer is 8924. That is 92*97=8924

Note:- The product of the two deviations should have asa many digits as the number of zeroes in the basae. In the above example the base is 100 having 2 zeroes so the product of -8 and -3 has 2 digits.
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Last edited by cleetus on 23 Nov 2011, 20:25, edited 2 times in total.

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02 Dec 2010, 11:07

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cleetus wrote:

Multiplication by 11the rule is "for each digit add the right hand side and write the result as the corresponding figure in the product."For the purpose of applying the rule, it will be easier if you assume that there is one "zero" on either side of the given number.eg: 7469*11= 074690 (apply the above said rule) = 82159

Sorry but I find this explanation a bit ambiguous. I would've word it like that:

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02 Dec 2010, 11:13

Thanks for ur comments. shall get back to this soon with more techniques. Plz make this thread alive by posting more easier techniques if anyone knows. Also do care to share this thread and site to your other GMAT friends.
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02 Dec 2010, 11:19

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juukkk wrote:

cleetus wrote:

Multiplication by 11the rule is "for each digit add the right hand side and write the result as the corresponding figure in the product."For the purpose of applying the rule, it will be easier if you assume that there is one "zero" on either side of the given number.eg: 7469*11= 074690 (apply the above said rule) = 82159

Sorry but I find this explanation a bit ambiguous. I would've word it like that:

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When you're multiplying two numbers together, be open to breaking down one or both of them into smaller values if that makes the multiplication quicker. For instance, if you're multiplying a large number by 9, multiply it by "10-1" instead:

894 * 9 = 894 * (10 - 1) = 8940 - 894 = 8046

Or if you're squaring a number that's very close to an easier value whose square you already know, try something like this:

301^2 = (300 + 1)^2 = 300^2 + 2*300*1 + 1^2 = 90000 + 600 + 1 = 90601

49^2 = (50 - 1)^2 = 2500 - 100 + 1 = 2401

Don't forget that you can change a value you're working with into a nicer form! The GMAT often gives you information that's actually pretty easy to work with, but that's intentionally presented in a harder or more complicated form than you technically need.
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03 Mar 2016, 21:38

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Most of these "speed" math techniques are irrelevant for the GMAT. If you have to resort to these techniques then you are on the wrong track. For example, you will not be required to multiply by 125 on the GMAT. If there is a problem that ends up having a number being multiplied by 125, then somehow the terms will simplify by cancellation. The same is true for some of the other rules such as multiplication by 11, or squaring numbers such as 245.

Almost all of the GMAT problems are written in a way that grunt numerical work can be avoided. This is because there is no calculator on the exam, and the goal of the test writers is not to test one's numerical prowess. This is not to say that the problems aren't set in a way that one can get trapped in the numerical morass, you just have to spot the clean way and stay away from tedious calculations. This will typically involve factoring, cancelling, dividing, and in some cases approximating.